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Definition 2024
Fagin
Fagin
See also: fagin
English
Alternative forms
Noun
Fagin (plural Fagins)
- A person who entices children into criminal activity, often teaching them how to conduct those crimes, and profits from their crimes in return for support.
- 1947, California News - Volumes 63-67, page 104:
- The indignation of the self-respecting deaf is aroused by the fact that nine-tenths of the mendicant peddling is engineered by slick Fagins who teach inexperienced deaf youths the tricks of the trade and then collect the lion's share of the profits.
- 1967, Public Hearing: Subject: Licensing of Private Facilities, page 14:
- We sort of treat a situation whereby the proprietor or operator or person running a foster home, if he were to make a profit, we sort of regard him as sort of a Fagin because he has been making money off little kids.
- 2009, Problems of Education, ISBN 8176489042, page 70:
- Each such group exercises a formative influence on the active dispositions of its members. A clique, a club, a gang, a Fagin's household of thieves, the prisoners in a jail, provide educative environments for those who enter into their collective or conjoint activities, as truly as a church, a labour union, a business partnership, or a political party.
- 2010, Graham Vickers, Neal Cassady: The Fast Life of a Beat Hero, ISBN 0857121375:
- A few of its occupants were poor, law-abiding folk just trying to get by peaceably, but it was a heaven-sent recruiting center for Jack and Ralph who, Neal said, ran a Fagin-like academy for aspiring pickpockets, sneak thieves, and burglars.
- 2013, Charles Samuel, Ghost of Honor, ISBN 130437338X, page 177:
- At Midwest there is a Fagin character, Quinton, who is running a school for terrorists or something on that order.
- 2016 May 23, Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, “Apocalypse pits the strengths of the X-Men series against the weaknesses”, in The Onion AV Club:
- Apocalypse also happens to be a Fagin figure, shuffling around the back alleys of Cairo, where he makes the weather-controlling pickpocket Storm (Alexandra Shipp) his first follower by offering her baubles.
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Derived terms
fagin
fagin
See also: Fagin
English
Noun
fagin (plural fagins)
- Alternative form of Fagin
- 1911, Walter Hines Page, Arthur Wilson Page, The World's Work: A History of Our Time - Volume 22, page 14847:
- From February until the following October, Latsky was daily in the streets with the "fagins," who made much of him; for at ten years of age he was admitted to be one of the very cleverest of all the young thieves on the East Side.
- 1954, Galaxy Magazine - Volume 8, Issues 1-6, page 118:
- You can always find a fagin or a madam for a kid. I don't know how prices are now — when I was thirteen, I brought fifty dollars." Norvell, his hair standing on end, said, "You?" "I guess I was lucky — they sold me to a fagin, not into a house.
- 2006, Hanna Wallinger, Transitions: Race, Culture, and the Dynamics of Change, ISBN 3825895319, page 67:
- Native Speaker does not present the United States as a promised land but as an "orphanage:" "It's an orphanage and there is a fagin"
- 2007, Anu Garg, The Dord, the Diglot, and an Avocado or Two, ISBN 1440623090:
- Profiling the legendary biblioklept Stephen Blumberg ("the greatest book thief in U.S. history"), the New Yorker magazine writes, “He was a fagin. Many of his friendships were with adolescent boys. He gave them money to help him unload his truck and sometimes to steal things."
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